Authors: Ellen Hopkins
Tags: #General, #Adolescence, #Family, #Social Science, #Human Sexuality, #Novels in verse, #Family problems, #Emotional Problems, #Psychology, #Social Issues, #Prostitution, #Fiction, #Juvenile Fiction, #Women's Studies, #Families, #Emotional Problems of Teenagers, #Dating & Sex, #juvenile
Weaving us in and out of the Bohemians
crowding the sidewalk.
It's nice to be out with him. But it also makes me
*
sad. We used to do this
more when we first got
together. Restaurants.
Theater. Long walks, talking about life in general.
*
Then it all became about sex. More sex. Better
sex. Unusual sex. Like
most couples, I guess.
Is that what I'm really
*
afraid of losing? Not
connection or affection, not the growth caused by absorbing love? If
so, what have I become?
188
I Can't Help
But think about that as
Pietro escorts us to our favorite table, one
we haven't asked for in too many weeks, a fact he
*
reminds us of.
Why have
you stayed away so long, misters? I was beginning to think you
maybe got bad fish last time.
*
Loren always orders the fresh fish. He responds,
Now you know we've never
gotten so much as a single
bad mouthful here, Pietro.
*
The broad Italian smiles.
Well then, we have on the menu fresh sea bass
tonight....
He goes on to describe the specials in detail.
*
I'll stick with my usual
mushroom raviolis.
I lost Pietro after sea bass, wondering if, without Loren,
I'll ever eat here again.
189
I Guess I Might
If I ever happen to come to Louisville again, once
Loren's gone. The food is delicious. If the place was in a different part of
*
town, I might even bring
Dad along, see if he could
interest Pietro in his supersecret
recipe for venison
sausage, biscuits, and gravy.
*
The thought makes me smile, and that makes Loren smile
too.
What? he
says, the corners of his mouth still curled in that oh-so-familiar way.
*
It's hard to put him and Dad in the same place, even if
that place is inside my head.
"Nothing." Under the table,
Loren's hand finds my thigh.
*
So,
he says,
I thought
we might go out for a little while after we
finish dessert. There's
a club not far from here....
190
His touch is doing strange
things to me. At least, they
feel awfully strange in a restaurant. "A club? You
mean...? You're not serious."
*
Completely serious. Tonight
they even let underage guys
inside, as long as they have a sponsor. I figured I could
sponsor you. How about it?
*
Right now, my body wants
him to do more than "sponsor"
me. But I have to admit, I'm a little curious. "I thought
you didn't like gay bars."
*
I don't. Not alone. But I'm
not alone tonight, am I?
He spies Pietro, bringing
our tiramisu, and his hand
falls away. Leaves me cold.
191
Cold Becomes Clammy
As Loren and I make our
way past Mr. ID Checker at the door to Fringe. He
looks at Loren's license, nods, barely glances at mine.
*
I shake my head. "What was that? He didn't give a damn about how old I am. And just
why do you have to show ID to prove you're underage?"
*
Loren grins.
You're supposed
to be eighteen to get in.
But you're right, he doesn't
really care. Kentucky
is notoriously lax on
*
such things. It hasn't been
all that long since they
raised the drinking age to twenty-one, and they
don't very often bust bars
*
for serving to minors.
Still, I wouldn't stand
right in front of the guy, sipping bourbon. He
might decide to get nasty.
192
Fringe
Is a lot different than I
thought it would be.
I expected sleazy, but it borders on upscale, all dark
wood and brass and suede.
*
It's not that late, as bar
scenes go, so the place
isn't too crowded. Still, maybe fifty or sixty guys are drinking, laughing,
*
and hitting on other guys, if they're not coupled up already. Loren and I find
cushy chairs in the back, and he goes to order drinks.
*
I use the opportunity to check out the river of faces.
Many are average. You
wouldn't look twice at them on the street. A few
*
you wouldn't want to look
at. Okay, they're not very
attractive, and when they
openly stare at me, it creeps me out completely.
193
There are also some beautiful
men here. Most of them are younger, yet a fair number
gravitate toward much older
guys. I don't think it's all about
*
love. I watch a decent-looking
middle-aged man, sandy
haired and very well dressed, head off to the men's room.
Within three minutes, his young
*
companion flirts obnoxiously.
Glad he didn't pick me to flirt
with. When the older guy
returns, he is not pleased.
He slams his fist on the table,
*
grabs his designer overcoat, and stomps toward the door, followed by the younger guy.
If I beat up a table, would
Loren follow me out the door?
194
Would He Decide to Stay
If I tried coercion instead of a simple plea? What if
I threatened his family?
Like I could, considering
I don't know who--or where--
*
they are. He's never shared
that information with me, nor told me where he went to school, or how (or if) he outed himself.
That's a lot not to tell me.
*
He returns now with two
sugar-rimmed glasses, filled with amber liquid and some sort of green
leaves.
Mint juleps,
he says.
*
Froufrou drinks? I take a big
swallow, fight to not choke.
"H-holy crap. What's in these things?" Whatever it is burns going down.
*
He can't help but laugh.
Bourbon. A little sugar
syrup, some mint leaves, but other than that,
bourbon. Sip, don't gulp.
195
I'm Doing a Fair Job
Of sipping, not gulping, when one of the most
incredible-looking men I've ever seen
shakes his butt by. My mouth
must have dropped open,
*
because Loren turns to see
what I'm staring at.
My, my
He
is
a fine work of art, isn't
he?
We watch the guy cozy up to a what might be less
*
than affectionately termed
"old faggot." Within five
seconds, the ancient dude is buying the fine work of art a drink. "What's up with that?"
*
Oh hon, haven't you ever
heard the term "sugar
daddy"? Lots of young
guys go looking for easy
drinks, easy meals, maybe
*
even a place to stay. When
you look like him--
he
points toward Pretty Boy, then he turns and his eyes
scan my face
--or you,
196
it isn't hard at all to find
someone who'll take
care of you. Sometimes
they'll set you up in your
own place, or move you
*
into theirs. Sometimes
you live like a movie
star, even. The price
tag is regular sex.
He waits for my reaction.
*
"Regular sex, with someone like that?" I take a deep
drink of minty bourbon, actually enjoy the burn.
"I could never do that!"
*
Loren shakes his head.
Never say never, dear.
You might be surprised at
what you can do, should
circumstances dictate.
197
A Poem by Whitney Lang
Circumstances
Create our conception, how we live, what kind of person we manage to grow
into. Another day, a different hour, take a left and not a right, you'd wind up a whole
different being. Knowing
if that would be better
requires a realm of experience
only decades can build.
Roses? Lilies? Moonlight?
Sunlight?
Which do I prefer? Ask
me again in thirty or forty years.
198
Whitney The Best Thing
About my mom being such a bitch is not worrying about trying to make her proud of me. Smoke it
*
up, drink it up, and if
I happen to get caught, well, wouldn't it just slay her if the news got around?
*
Kyra, too. Oh, she'd pretend
that her concern was all about me, rather than her precious reputation,
*
but that would be total
toad crap. "Total toad
crap." TIC. Hey, I like that. TTC, my new spew.
199
Kyra's Home
From Vassar. Normal
college geeks go to places like Florida or Mexico for spring break. Not Kyra.
*
She comes home to spend
time with Mom, who actually
rescheduled a tennis game to take her into the city.
*
I sooooo need some new
clothes,
Kyra fished.
The styles back east are sooooo not me, you know?
*
Like jeans aren't the same beyond the Mississippi.
Like you can't find angora in Manhattan! TTC. for sure.
*
Mom swallowed the bait.
We'll run up to Sacramento
Street. There's a new boutique
I've been dying to check out.
*
Then maybe Daddy can take
time to have lunch with us. New
York seafood can't possibly
compare to San Francisco's.
200
sounds fun,
said Kyra.
Give
Daddy a call and see if he can
make it. I'll go take a shower.
Unless you want it first....
*
Directed at me. "No, no.
Go ahead. I'm not planning on going anywhere special
today, just hanging out here."
*
Mom just shook her head, but
Kyra sputtered,
You're not
coming? But you have to! It will
be so much more fun with you.
*
Like they really wanted me to come. Talk about TTC!
"No, you guys go. I don't feel so great today, anyway."
*
Kyra might have argued
more, but Mom decided,
You should stay home then.
Last thing I need is a bug.
201
Last Thing
Any of us needs is Mom with a bug. She's bitchy
enough totally healthy.
Weird, but I can't remember
*
the last time she was sick.
Too freaking mean, I guess.
She probably scares the bugs
away. Anyway, Kyra and
*
she continued their mutual
butt-kiss fest all the way out the door. I have to admit
I half wanted to change
*
my mind and go with them.
If I believed they really
wanted my company, I just
might have. Instead, knowing
*
I'll have the place to myself
most of the day, I called Lucas as soon as the door slammed behind Butt Kissers One and Two.
202
After the Last Fiasco
Lucas was just a bit hesitant.
Are you
sure?
Man
,
last time was a way close call. I definitely
don't need that kind of trouble.
*
What a wuss! But that's not
what I said. What I said was,
"They won't be home until three at the absolute earliest.
*
Come over right now. Please?"
Then I made my voice all
breathy, hoping that was sexy.
"I really, really need to see you."
*
Need to see him, to melt like candle
wax against his heat. Need his heat.
Any heat. Need to feel warmed, wanted. For a change.
*
But I didn't say any of that, either. No use letting him
know I'm needy. Anyway, it worked.
He should be here any minute.
203
I Did Shower
Even borrowed some of Kyra's
way expensive ginger-scented
shampoo and lotion. No wonder she always smells so good!
*
The last time I went to the mall with Paige, one of the few